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the carolina watchman 70l xx.-third series salisbury h c thursday june 13 1889 no 34 pianoforte tuning foe salisbury â– pop i'i.-mo i i . i â– - tiit tern , â– : runient and eai . ifany dealer says lie has tjiew i . douglas ckocti without name and i>ri bt:nnucÂ«t on the bottom i>ut liim down as a fraud Â£ m j w l douglas tr cs-if^c for 4>Â«3 dnwc gentlemen best in the world exaniinehja s5.oo oknuin'k hasi>-skwkd shoe 84.oo hand-skwl i ffeltshok h:i o i'oi.k'i am ka km klts f shoe 82jj0 i \ i it vam i al siiok s'o():im.1 si.v li()ys s iiooi siioi'.s all wade in congress hull xi anil lace w a l douglas s3 shoe labtes beat material besl stjie i'.cst liuinb "' v 1 tfougi v bkockton iiass examine w l douglas 2 shoe for 1 ladies koli sale by m s brown salisbury trade Â£& 1 mark for sale by jxo ii exniss druggist d a atwell's [ hardware store re a lull line of goods in his hue may i!\v.-i s lie found bk r ft knlwgnm v.a '> ttntttl ! " 'â– ; â– â– vi tr i , . , ,.''â– " siiu.un t co iiitx tjl 1'ortljtnu iaine this papeb absolutely pure this powder never varies a marvelof purity 3trengili,and ivholesoineaess more economical than the ordinary kinds ami cannot be sold lu | competll km wll b tueinullitud oi low lent short j Â»â– <â– !>; mi , alum or phosphate powders sold only in ans kovai bakim powder co..iob wall fet n y porssilc by bin<rliam it co young & bos tian hini x p murphy this age is full nf humbugs an 1 that remedy that disproves this chargu is a god-send to human ity i ii li ha never failed m that ought to count for something to him who wants to be cured of what ii ij ij sets itself up to cure utterly surprised ! meridian miss july 12 1887 for a number of years i have suffered un told agony from the effects of blood poison i had my case treated by several prominent physicians but received but little if any re lief 1 resorted to all sorts of patent medicines spending a large amount of money but yet getting no better my attention was attracted by the cure said to have been affected by h 15 ii and i commence taking ii merely as an experi ment having but little faith in the results to my utter surprise 1 soon commenced to improve aii'l deem myself to-day a well and hearty per son â€” all owing to the excellent qualities of b i 1 1 cannot commend it too highly to those ruffcring from blood poison j o gibson trainman m & 0 r r after twenty years baltimore april 20 1887 â€” tor over twen ty years 1 have been troubled with ulcerated ! bowels and bleeding piles and grew very weak and thin from constant loss of bloo i 1 have ! used i bottles ol b 1 i an 1 have gained 15 pjun-ls in weight and feel better in general lieali ' than 1 have for ten years i recom i mend your 1 b is as the best medicine i have ever used ami owe my improvement !<â– the u^e mic mood balm eucexius a smith 318 exeter st an old man restored dawso.v ga june 30 1887 â€” being an old man anil suffering from general debility ami j rheumatism of the joint nt the shoulders i found difficulty in attending to ray business that of a lawver until 1 bought and used five bottles nf !!. ii b botanic blood halm of mr t c bines or 1 r irwin & son and my general health i improved and the rheumatism left me i believe it to be a good medicine j 11 laing all who leslre full infonnxjon about the cause an i cure or isio â€¢ 1 poisons scrofula anil scrofulous is l'lcors sores rheumatism kidney complaints r itarrh etc can secure by m:iil free a c py of our 32-pasjc llust r il â– â– ! i5oÂ»k of wonders illlcd witli the most wonderful and startling proof ever i foreknown address 4o:lj blood baiji.co atlanta ga b jl i bh h 1 1 { *& y i isbu at ;:;:>':â– ' â€¢â– â€¢. l?Â»o fov liver strenfrili <â– :â– i : ; -. <â– j ., i l reg'tllittes til bonds ii.,i ai-e ussequused attau r . . ., i ,.;.. ; {';â– < ;â– :<â– '. . 3?(.'i3 - \ irjnos nro â€¢. i -, rcro^u : zvi . i h t i ey posatiw pec i â€¢. -â€¢'â– vr.-n i -. : 1 ;::â€¢: i â– *!' e'.ys'em l !â– â€¢Â»*â€¢Â» tin i i â‚¬â– ,:.<>!. i â€¢<'â€¢ â– . : s Â» > : y sn;;ar couit.-u l.oso s.uail rrico 3cts sold i^tcrâ€”v/zigrc ( â– â– â€¢'.:' â€¢<â€¢. â– '. ! rlurray st now york p h.thompson & go maxufactckers sash doors blinds work scroll sawing wood turning bhaosetba c and castinc3 of all kinds dealers in steam engines and boilers steam and water pipe steam fitting 0 , shafting pulley hangers â€” also â€” machinery of all kinds repaired on short notice mar 15/88 ly subscribe for the carolina watchman 1 ' l,l.;y o ii 1 :â– â– â– â– ;.< -â– Â»â€¢-â– - â€” home company seeking home patronage /:: c k a strong company m prompt reliable liberal ! is a-fm .:. iii i-itii ami towns in in s tit 1 1 "â– â– *Â£& i o : 2*si3 j - rhodes browne president total a ssets ' s75o,o0o j allen beow agent s^liscvry n 0 knr the watchman the eoys of sixty yebrs ago hezekiah*8 fibst cotrtship paht iii the captain was struck dump and fell into i dreamy state for a few min utes during which time he uncon sciously relaxed his hold on the soft i hand which he had convulsively grasp ed on putting the momentous question was he dreaming a multitude of i conflicting thoughts were racing < through his brain everything seem ( ed to be in a vhirl he heard the drummer of his company beating the s long roll and saw his invincible blues i in the net of firing a salute â€” they : h'red and the captain thought every 1 charge had hit him square in front < and he wanted to know whether he i was dead or alive slowly he returned to semi-consciousness the chairs and s other furnititure in the room hud al i most ceased to whirl his fair deceiv < er was still sitting before him with t quilt pieces in hand still pans .â– ing on the threshold of doom he at last thought he might break the awful si < lence with most respectful timidity 1 he said 1 miss rebecca did i understand you i to say no yes sir was the answer softly at ; tered i another long pause ensued which i the defeated suitor spent in an endeav ( or to take in the full import of the s situation he was not a craven lie would never beg not even when under i the rod of the master at school he i would never yell take him off in his t boyhood tights but bear in dignified i silence whatever fell to him well then said he the best com Â«â– pliment i can pay you now is to thank j you for the lady-like politeness you j have constantly shown me and after wishing you all the happiness attain \ able in this life and the next take my self away as promptly as possible â€” i i bid you farewell t she sprang to her feet and grasped the extended hand and said captain i please don't be angry with me i ; couldn't help it | and it was probably true that she ] couldn't help it couldn't help re ] ceiving his company and attentions â€” for really he was a very companion j able fellow as many knew even as well ( as she i our defeated hero was soon in the < saddle again as his horse was still hitched to a post near the gate he ( felt very strange his vision was clouded and his feet were too light indeed it seemed as if he had lost his \ usual attraction to the earth and that 1 a puff of wind might blow him away the whole world seemed changed and < looked dark and sad his steed turned towards home but he dreaded to go 1 there he dreaded to go anywhere { and coveted a place beyond mortal ken i all nature was against liim the rust ( ling leaves and waving limbs of the trees mucked him they birds which chirp ] ed as they hew to a roost for the night | behaved strangely as if they knew his | case the grasshoppers derided him i and the frogs in the ponds and mead ] ows along the road were absolutely in ( suiting the little fellows among ] them would pipe out kick-ed kick-ed " j and the rusty old rascals would groan â– loud enough to be heard a mile,'"cover up cover-up cover-up it was a wearisome sorrowful ride and the ] only mitigating circumstance connect ] ed with it was the almost total dark < ness which promised to cover his re ] turn into town he heard the word fooled lie could not tell how often and knew it was aimed at him some times it came up from the ground and and then from the dark forest around him the hooting owls after hooting in dismal tones would end with a laugh â€” all at him his horse made a strange noise now and then as if try ing to cheer but this was exhiliarating rather than depressing for he was con , sck)u6 that there was virtue in good humor and this strange noise was repeated with such peculiar emphasis about the time the horse struck his hoof on the incorporated limits that our hero could stand it no longer but broke out into a big laugh and began to wonder at himself for not thinking of it sooner my figures were right â€” i'd swear by them forever said he in a musing sort of way but how did she know anything about it she couldn't help it 1 help what know ing my figures wise girl sweet lady god bless her â€” and have mercy on me for i need it it requires time for at honest man to recover from such an experience it lingers with him for months and years and sometimes colors his whole life fortunately capt woodman was a laboring mm and under the necessi ty of being diligent in business lie was also blessed with a good share of philosophy and faith in god to whom be had oar.'v learned to submit in all thing tim 1 , absence from the charmer and reflection all came to his aid and in less than a year he was able to relate to his friends more minutely and more interestingly than i have done the incidents of his first courtship the sub?eq'ient history of the par ties afford exaniplei of most striking contrast oae w<3nt up up the other down down the one left an honored nun and a highly respected family with provisi n.s for their com fort the other after a short season of prosperity the possibilities of life only what iiiuht have been on th ? brink or in the shadow of sin when goeffry weston eloped with a millionaire's daughter and the father had disinherited her he held his wife in his arms and said solemn ' as long as i can work beg steal ' or murder you shall never want for any \ thing don't say such wicked things mur mured the young wife laying her head ! jii his lips and yet it pleased her to see o him much in earnest geoffry occupied a handsome posi tion where he handled a great deal of money and was in receipt of a com fortable salary his wife however cnew very little of housekeeping nnd economy was an unfamiliar word with her in due time her father nnrriel a schoolmate of her own and she often net the young lady and began to vie with her in costume and was so ex ravagant that geoffry soon found hini ely deeply in debt coming home in a desperate mood one night he found rosa in tears she held a little note in her hand and at ast was prevailed upon to tell her hus jand the trouble 1 wanted to get a dress from mad une flouncette and she has written ue the most impertinent answer the mean thing i'll just go to somebody dse i want a very pretty dress my step-mother will be there and she says such horrid things and father warned ne i'd he in rags if i married you and foil said you'd never let me laeed any thing now is the time to prove you meant it all i did mean it said geoffry you shall have the money rosa he left the room went out into the hall and laced slowly up and down come to supper geoffry called his ivife lint he answered i'll be back in a moment 11 and she heard him shut he door behind him as he did so the safe key fell from the pocket of the coat he carried on his irm to the marble floor of the vesti bule he stopped and picked it up her husband had a bad habit of drop ping that key she ran to the window and saw him ake a car that passed the corner in the lirection of his place of business his movements were more rapid and ner i-ous than usual a cold chill ran through her frame iread of she knew not what what a child i am she thought the the words that he had ut ered on her wedding day came back to ler i will work beg steal or murder to yon all you want how he had put her hands over his ips to stop him still not believing hat he would ever do anything tvrong but now â€” now what had she lone suddenly her own folly arose before ier plainly defined to sight she knew how much her husband made iow much they had spent he must be in debt he must be unable to meet liis expenses her poor geoff ry ! how ould she have been so blind and now under the pressure of her foolish retting for a new dress he had gone as he said to get the money how where she remembered the fate of a faith less clerk of her father's and remem bered that it was said he stole for the sake of an extravagant wife and her heart smote her what could she do was it an angel that whispered in her ear follow him afterward she thought so she caught up a hat and sacque and ran out putting on her gloves as she went she took a car and went straight to her husband's place of busine-s the street was dark and lonely no one was astir but through a crack of the closed shutter she saw a light shine she tried the door it opened under her touch and she entered some one had lit the gas in the in ner room it threw a shadow high upon the wall now the shadow vanished trembling with excitement she crept on up to the very door and saw her husband bending over the great safe he turned fiercely with his hand at a pocket in which she knew he carried a pistol who is there he asked in a fu j rioiis whisper and she answered only rosa and be sank down beside a desk and j looked at her strangely you here he said why did you j follow me i was frightened she said j so was i said he i remembered to have left the safe unlocked but it is all right now no goeffry answered rosa it is all wrong " i am no longer a fool ish baby i seem to have come back to myself put that money back it this is the first time i hare driven you to such a thing i will thank god font you hare kept your vow even to steal for me have mercy on me and break it put the money back tell me all she said tell me all darlitig and in that lonely old piece the two young people talked together for long hour we will sell the piano and my jew erly and all v.e da not need said the girl at lash and i will keep house for you as a poor man's wife should and we will be just as happy as we have been together why should we not and in time we wilfbe better off at least we will be hones and safe as honest people are oh greoffry to think to what i might have driven yon they walked home together arm in arm and next day set to work to struggle out of the load of debt uporit their shoulders it was a hard task but they succeeded at list and to-day are happy and prosperous and on the road to fortune the death of father damien charlotte democrat father damien the leper priest died april kith in the village of kalawno on the island of molokai one of the hawaiian group this village of kal awoa is reserved for cast-out lepers alone and about seven hundred of them are confined there by force father damien was born in belgium in 1840 and went to the hawaiian islands at the age of 24 he resided there until he was 33 when he offered his ser vices to go among the lepers he went with the knowledge that he must stay that he must die a leper and at the head of his little church working to the last he did die a leper he remained at the settlement six teen years administering to the bodily and spiritual comfort of the wretched desperate frantic sutlers he was at first despised but by sacrifice won his way to honor he provided houses and food and established soberness clean liness and belief in god he helped the strong nursed the dying did all manner of menial work and buried the dead such is a skeleton picture of dam:en whose heroism seems illum ined by some of the light of that star which pointed men to the babe of bethlehem st giles the benedictine monk lived according to legend in the moun tain side loving god's creatures even the wild animals knew of his gentle ness a helpless hind pursued by hunters iled to his cavern for rescue he took it into his armsi and the ar row that pierced the heart of the hind first pierced the hand of the hermit over the spot in a swiss vallev a ehap el bell rings out daily its mellow er quiescat some may doubt the prac tical importance of damien's sacrifice but who shall judge he has the chant of the hearts of humanity for his tolling bells even as st giles took the harmless hind so damien toi k the deadly leper to his hart and wrap ping about him his own leprous arm he southed him with the master's baln the hand indeed that healed fell help less but the world rose stronger when that hand fell operation on a lion the tine lion jupiter at the clifton zoological gardens bristol which is nearly 11 years old having been cub bed in the gardens in the year 1s7s was noticed lately to have a claw on the left fore paw growing into the flesh of its foot which was gradually laming the animal the lion was evidently in pain and it was deemed advisable to remove the claw the novel operation was performed recently when a close traveling cage was introduced into the den and placed against one of the sliding traps in the partition the animal having been induced to enter the cage it was removed to the floor of the building and another case but of different construction composed solely of iron bars placed endways to the door of the first cage and the two firmly lashed together after some little tiouble the animal was got i:it the second cage which was so narrow as not to admit of his turning round heavy inch and a half planks were then inserted between the bars and the lion tightly wedged in up to this point he had submitted quietly but on the introduction of the planks he splintered them up as easily as though they had been matchwood at last he was firmly wedged in and a little time was given him to cool down a fa vorable opportunity for the operation occurred in a few minutes his paw bring partly through the bars the head keeper lilunsden who was wait ing with a pair of powerful nippers seized the opportunity and the offend ing claw was promptly removed the operation which was conducted by dr harrison treasurer of the gardens was absolutely necessary as the claw had already grown more than half an inch into the foot and would probably have killed the animal london times | ~~~ to clean the pots the natural color of iron i gray and ' a litt'e care will keep iron vessels this color if they are black it is because ' they are dirty it is a good plan occa sionally f yon must use iron ware 1 instead of fighter vessels to plunge 1 such ai tides as baking pans spiders ! griddles etc in water with one table spoonful of soda to each gallon oi ; water cover close and cook them foi ' two hours then remove one at a timt j and wash each piece before it dries ! you will be amazed at the change condition of your ware the first tim i you do it unless you are one amonj ten thousand of our heuseheep re yankee blade good roads it is the bust of the people of the present age that it is one of enlight ment civilization and progress if closely anal v zed however it will ap : war that this enlightmeut civilization and progress follows close in the wake of improved facilities for transporta tion in the earlier ages of the world civilization followed the shores of the sea for that whs the world great highway in the east where traveling was mosty performed on beasts of burden a certain track was pursued mid trav-j > eling was done by caravan at a verj j early period in the history of the kasl there were marked out liti.-s of inter communication running from land to land and binding different nations to gether these lines ran from bast to west that being the line on which trade and civilization ran a popula tion increased and their wants enlarg ed the demand for improved roads and modes of transportation kept pace â™¦ * * * the progress in arts sciences com merce and manufacturers demands at the hands of the present generation 1 a permanent system of public roads i ; 2 permanent improvement of pub lic roads not only is more rapid transporta â– tion but cheaper transportation is re i quired competition is so sharp that i profits are too small to permit handling ' of small loads if a horse could haul i 500 pounds years ago profitably to the i producer he must now haul 1,000 pounds to make it equally as remuner : i ative . the present style not sy.stem of i making < ? j the public roada is a t.ix i without any benefit even if every ] hand worked the full limit of the law i fifteen days no practical good would i result from his labors the near ap ' proach of court forces out the road â– overseers and the road is run over to i make it passable the first rain wipps i out the work or m ikes the roa i wor.se i than it was before i the need of the hour is a properly i constructed road on a system that will â– be permanent and the improvements \ put on it of a permanent character i why good roads are needed we are t changing from big plantation to small i farms from the all-cotton expensive i yst^m to tli diversified crop and in 1 tensive system : from all credit to all i cash we need to sell off part of oar . land to cut off taxation on uri rodn - fiye capital we need every facility to market expeditiously \\ ithout good roads immigration is an impossi bility without small farms diversified crops cannot be successfully produced in order then to get the immigrant h and intrudiue the small farmer on the mall farm good roods are indispensa ble on the score of progress thrift economy and humanity a permanent system oi permanently improved roads is the imperative necessity of the hour throughout the entire south n deeper and keener interest than ever be fjre is manifested on this important theme the public mind is directed very pointedly in this directii i and cannot be diverted from it the marietta ( tii i journal says good roads are indispensable to the citizen and farmer in his travels t and from market with bis cotton wood and produce the present roads are woe fully bad and there should be a system devised by which they should 1 tin ! proved mud holes wash-outs and high hills almost render our road im passable grood,solid road beds should be constructed and the money so spent would be well spent good roads en hance the value of property and - the wear of vehicles and enable ani mals to do better service give â– better roads ' quite an important factor in i development of any section of ' country says the liall e manui ic turers record is its public ro good roads are an advetth themselves the public roads of the south in â– â– i much improvent and no tiru be lost in devising effective methods oi bettering their condit i loo 1 roads p iv for tiie solve . ' â€¢ saving they effect in the v r of vehicles and the i animals to say not tages to traffic md i the traveling public the ru li for road-making of the highest i are abundantly distributed all â– south and the public roada i i section with gooÂ»l management â– be made the best in the c r.iutry southern < ultinttor a curious weather prophet is bein shown in a broadway s'.ore-v . t h a tree-toad c mfined in a _â– i - there is a little ladd r foi t 1 up and down on and so susceptible i ' the little prisoner to changes i . i ' ascends to the top of the 1 " the air grows moist in advan ' and descends when clear â€¢â– â– â€¢ i ; i ir at hand it als i bee i i â€¢ before a stonn to i ' never sx-en a tree-toad it in iv 'â– â– â– esting to know th it it re r ordinary garden-toad in fonii i - more flattened the color varies â€¢ pale ash to dark brown it'll b 1 of greenish-brown and the st '' yellow the eyes are large and bril = liant it a'jounds about olil tree â€¢â€¢. - , fences and old si me w u st ''.// ke-d fetrifyin springs here is i well known petrifying stream of water it knaresboro york shire england three miles from h;ir te the w.i known sanitarium it i a cascade from the ttiver nidd about fifteen feet high and twice aa liru.nl and forms an aqueous curtain to a cave known as mother shipton's cave the dripping waters are u>ed for the purpose of petrifying anything sent to be hung up in the drip of tho water ledge wliieh flows over as it were the eaves of thecave thisledg of limestone rock i augmented ni ceasingly bj the action f the waters which flow ov r it tl <â– cascade has au endless variety of ol jeers hung up by si nrl lengths of wire to be petrified by the water trickling over them aa sponges books gloves herchiefs and veils hunter's cap fox cat dog birds boots etc . just as fa u \ prompts people tos<ek petrifying results a sponge is petritied in n few month n ix ok or cap in a year or two cat or l>ml a little longer a ran â– ::; i of many interesting things is to lie seen in the house of the custodian of the mother shipton cure the things petrified are mostly larger and somewhat misshapen by the gra itation of the silicate making the mass larger on ill under side of the suspen sion in the casca e a cat for in stance has the legs nearly joined and largei in proportion than the body i ne cat show u in the museum had the head broken nil at the neck showing the whole was linn stone throughout with not i trace of the organic stru - i ! the 01 iginal cat a glove h - toinei like a han !. a b i ik of sermons i block ol stone from which science may read it serin ins through without printing or jeeves when looking at this cascad â– is an art ist i could 11 Â« â€¢ t help thinking of the poor old woman who lived before h r time and w ho w;.s spared for the fate i many thousands f human beings called witches who have been burned by the ign mint mob ir legally h the state officials mostly it the instigation of the priesthood if woul ! bo a fitting place for i â– : itue of the historic personage whose prophecies are one l>v ne being verified to be seutel within i he cave looking o i through the veil if dripping waters on the visitors to .'â– )â€¢â€¢ cave an 1 a-s fitting inscription ill pront the words fri mi a modern port might be n ritten : i ir : hue in ! hen-l . ill the i.h-t â– â– . . . â€¢ - : â– i !. /'"â€¢ i.j i â– ' i int i have i hum hi head petrified but by what action i do net kin w it was found in digging a trench through gravel in the park at bulstnx.'e in buckinghnni.shile kiil r . the subject of petrifaction is highly interesting and deserves careful inves tigation i believe many specimens i '!' pivhistoi â– , as w^ll as organic rem:-iins mighl be recovered from the earth i â– ts were qualified to judge of tools i . >â– '. ternal formation geologists unfortunately are too often book and stone student and not csip . i : by appearanceof n pet rified t i itÂ«>ne only or not i ch h\.y kin(i 22 fjrovest n \\ .. l.Â«ndon â– Â»Â«Â»â™¦â– â€” â€” curios:ti33 of panstaation the 1 _' specimens of curious â– i re gh en 1 the printers \ :. . i â– â€¢â– . ho wjid mi : lenly taken si k ' hastened liome while every for his recovery were resorted to in spite of ull his effort he di d in the ih of th ( bri^tiau religion 1 a man v v a r lilrund car : to \\ i supp(jsed to l>i â– b s "\\ e have de . - * '. house lar r ': scholars â€¢ â€¢.: a certain rail : luminous direction ... u ben trains in an are upproach . te lines con ii be rÂ»-'j i---tÂ»-d â– _ â– â€¢ tivet rains t a halt f meeting and lÂ«i . : u:li train \ steamboat sion,snys â€¢ : children tho office this low of tin . : â€¢. 'â– ! . ! tr '\\ i Â« ho died . iew and improved '.-,"â– :. as :â€¢;:â– horse for ' a ladj ' â€¢ - â– â€¢ 'â– -,' about j â€¢ pounds " \ i iowa â€¢ â– â– - : we have re t of 1 â€¢â€¢ gr j from o r i . . â– â€¢ . s will please a - â– -. some t \% 1 1 1 f i : are >..â€¢ inches in diameter board m j â€¢ hud .' xo \ ivai 1 â– !â– [ en with gas 1 vthen -. i i ; . i th : . any person ilriving ov r i â€¢â– fa t r than -\ â– .. â– â– :. :...â– -â– i five â€¢ twelit - : pen i to be be : rm â€¢â€¢:' a newr i ii : we have two v l.irjÂ»e to hc te 590 pupils one above anoth another newsptper in de le <\ ags of a cohvention at . cleveland said the procession was 1 very fine md ueÂ»rly two miles long ' â€¢â€¢â€¢! a dr perry t

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the carolina watchman 70l xx.-third series salisbury h c thursday june 13 1889 no 34 pianoforte tuning foe salisbury â– pop i'i.-mo i i . i â– - tiit tern , â– : runient and eai . ifany dealer says lie has tjiew i . douglas ckocti without name and i>ri bt:nnucÂ«t on the bottom i>ut liim down as a fraud Â£ m j w l douglas tr cs-if^c for 4>Â«3 dnwc gentlemen best in the world exaniinehja s5.oo oknuin'k hasi>-skwkd shoe 84.oo hand-skwl i ffeltshok h:i o i'oi.k'i am ka km klts f shoe 82jj0 i \ i it vam i al siiok s'o():im.1 si.v li()ys s iiooi siioi'.s all wade in congress hull xi anil lace w a l douglas s3 shoe labtes beat material besl stjie i'.cst liuinb "' v 1 tfougi v bkockton iiass examine w l douglas 2 shoe for 1 ladies koli sale by m s brown salisbury trade Â£& 1 mark for sale by jxo ii exniss druggist d a atwell's [ hardware store re a lull line of goods in his hue may i!\v.-i s lie found bk r ft knlwgnm v.a '> ttntttl ! " 'â– ; â– â– vi tr i , . , ,.''â– " siiu.un t co iiitx tjl 1'ortljtnu iaine this papeb absolutely pure this powder never varies a marvelof purity 3trengili,and ivholesoineaess more economical than the ordinary kinds ami cannot be sold lu | competll km wll b tueinullitud oi low lent short j Â»â– ; mi , alum or phosphate powders sold only in ans kovai bakim powder co..iob wall fet n y porssilc by bin':â– ' â€¢â– â€¢. l?Â»o fov liver strenfrili !. i â€¢ : y sn;;ar couit.-u l.oso s.uail rrico 3cts sold i^tcrâ€”v/zigrc ( â– â– â€¢'.:' â€¢ eling was done by caravan at a verj j early period in the history of the kasl there were marked out liti.-s of inter communication running from land to land and binding different nations to gether these lines ran from bast to west that being the line on which trade and civilization ran a popula tion increased and their wants enlarg ed the demand for improved roads and modes of transportation kept pace â™¦ * * * the progress in arts sciences com merce and manufacturers demands at the hands of the present generation 1 a permanent system of public roads i ; 2 permanent improvement of pub lic roads not only is more rapid transporta â– tion but cheaper transportation is re i quired competition is so sharp that i profits are too small to permit handling ' of small loads if a horse could haul i 500 pounds years ago profitably to the i producer he must now haul 1,000 pounds to make it equally as remuner : i ative . the present style not sy.stem of i making < ? j the public roada is a t.ix i without any benefit even if every ] hand worked the full limit of the law i fifteen days no practical good would i result from his labors the near ap ' proach of court forces out the road â– overseers and the road is run over to i make it passable the first rain wipps i out the work or m ikes the roa i wor.se i than it was before i the need of the hour is a properly i constructed road on a system that will â– be permanent and the improvements \ put on it of a permanent character i why good roads are needed we are t changing from big plantation to small i farms from the all-cotton expensive i yst^m to tli diversified crop and in 1 tensive system : from all credit to all i cash we need to sell off part of oar . land to cut off taxation on uri rodn - fiye capital we need every facility to market expeditiously \\ ithout good roads immigration is an impossi bility without small farms diversified crops cannot be successfully produced in order then to get the immigrant h and intrudiue the small farmer on the mall farm good roods are indispensa ble on the score of progress thrift economy and humanity a permanent system oi permanently improved roads is the imperative necessity of the hour throughout the entire south n deeper and keener interest than ever be fjre is manifested on this important theme the public mind is directed very pointedly in this directii i and cannot be diverted from it the marietta ( tii i journal says good roads are indispensable to the citizen and farmer in his travels t and from market with bis cotton wood and produce the present roads are woe fully bad and there should be a system devised by which they should 1 tin ! proved mud holes wash-outs and high hills almost render our road im passable grood,solid road beds should be constructed and the money so spent would be well spent good roads en hance the value of property and - the wear of vehicles and enable ani mals to do better service give â– better roads ' quite an important factor in i development of any section of ' country says the liall e manui ic turers record is its public ro good roads are an advetth themselves the public roads of the south in â– â– i much improvent and no tiru be lost in devising effective methods oi bettering their condit i loo 1 roads p iv for tiie solve . ' â€¢ saving they effect in the v r of vehicles and the i animals to say not tages to traffic md i the traveling public the ru li for road-making of the highest i are abundantly distributed all â– south and the public roada i i section with gooÂ»l management â– be made the best in the c r.iutry southern < ultinttor a curious weather prophet is bein shown in a broadway s'.ore-v . t h a tree-toad c mfined in a _â– i - there is a little ladd r foi t 1 up and down on and so susceptible i ' the little prisoner to changes i . i ' ascends to the top of the 1 " the air grows moist in advan ' and descends when clear â€¢â– â– â€¢ i ; i ir at hand it als i bee i i â€¢ before a stonn to i ' never sx-en a tree-toad it in iv 'â– â– â– esting to know th it it re r ordinary garden-toad in fonii i - more flattened the color varies â€¢ pale ash to dark brown it'll b 1 of greenish-brown and the st '' yellow the eyes are large and bril = liant it a'jounds about olil tree â€¢â€¢. - , fences and old si me w u st ''.// ke-d fetrifyin springs here is i well known petrifying stream of water it knaresboro york shire england three miles from h;ir te the w.i known sanitarium it i a cascade from the ttiver nidd about fifteen feet high and twice aa liru.nl and forms an aqueous curtain to a cave known as mother shipton's cave the dripping waters are u>ed for the purpose of petrifying anything sent to be hung up in the drip of tho water ledge wliieh flows over as it were the eaves of thecave thisledg of limestone rock i augmented ni ceasingly bj the action f the waters which flow ov r it tl ml a little longer a ran â– ::; i of many interesting things is to lie seen in the house of the custodian of the mother shipton cure the things petrified are mostly larger and somewhat misshapen by the gra itation of the silicate making the mass larger on ill under side of the suspen sion in the casca e a cat for in stance has the legs nearly joined and largei in proportion than the body i ne cat show u in the museum had the head broken nil at the neck showing the whole was linn stone throughout with not i trace of the organic stru - i ! the 01 iginal cat a glove h - toinei like a han !. a b i ik of sermons i block ol stone from which science may read it serin ins through without printing or jeeves when looking at this cascad â– is an art ist i could 11 Â« â€¢ t help thinking of the poor old woman who lived before h r time and w ho w;.s spared for the fate i many thousands f human beings called witches who have been burned by the ign mint mob ir legally h the state officials mostly it the instigation of the priesthood if woul ! bo a fitting place for i â– : itue of the historic personage whose prophecies are one l>v ne being verified to be seutel within i he cave looking o i through the veil if dripping waters on the visitors to .'â– )â€¢â€¢ cave an 1 a-s fitting inscription ill pront the words fri mi a modern port might be n ritten : i ir : hue in ! hen-l . ill the i.h-t â– â– . . . â€¢ - : â– i !. /'"â€¢ i.j i â– ' i int i have i hum hi head petrified but by what action i do net kin w it was found in digging a trench through gravel in the park at bulstnx.'e in buckinghnni.shile kiil r . the subject of petrifaction is highly interesting and deserves careful inves tigation i believe many specimens i '!' pivhistoi â– , as w^ll as organic rem:-iins mighl be recovered from the earth i â– ts were qualified to judge of tools i . >â– '. ternal formation geologists unfortunately are too often book and stone student and not csip . i : by appearanceof n pet rified t i itÂ«>ne only or not i ch h\.y kin(i 22 fjrovest n \\ .. l.Â«ndon â– Â»Â«Â»â™¦â– â€” â€” curios:ti33 of panstaation the 1 _' specimens of curious â– i re gh en 1 the printers \ :. . i â– â€¢â– . ho wjid mi : lenly taken si k ' hastened liome while every for his recovery were resorted to in spite of ull his effort he di d in the ih of th ( bri^tiau religion 1 a man v v a r lilrund car : to \\ i supp(jsed to l>i â– b s "\\ e have de . - * '. house lar r ': scholars â€¢ â€¢.: a certain rail : luminous direction ... u ben trains in an are upproach . te lines con ii be rÂ»-'j i---tÂ»-d â– _ â– â€¢ tivet rains t a halt f meeting and lÂ«i . : u:li train \ steamboat sion,snys â€¢ : children tho office this low of tin . : â€¢. 'â– ! . ! tr '\\ i Â« ho died . iew and improved '.-,"â– :. as :â€¢;:â– horse for ' a ladj ' â€¢ - â– â€¢ 'â– -,' about j â€¢ pounds " \ i iowa â€¢ â– â– - : we have re t of 1 â€¢â€¢ gr j from o r i . . â– â€¢ . s will please a - â– -. some t \% 1 1 1 f i : are >..â€¢ inches in diameter board m j â€¢ hud .' xo \ ivai 1 â– !â– [ en with gas 1 vthen -. i i ; . i th : . any person ilriving ov r i â€¢â– fa t r than -\ â– .. â– â– :. :...â– -â– i five â€¢ twelit - : pen i to be be : rm â€¢â€¢:' a newr i ii : we have two v l.irjÂ»e to hc te 590 pupils one above anoth another newsptper in de le